Keep ad hominems out of this. If you have an issue with his arguments, address it. Do NOT waste time and space with a personal attack.
No. When he starts making arguments, I'll take issue with them. right now he might as well be an Alex Jones rss feed. That demionstrates a complete lack of respect for the argument and from what I can tell, a complete lack of indepenent, rational though. So no. If he wants to stop acting like a moron, fine.
You have at least take the time to answer the question (well, you think you are answering the question),
Yes, carbon credits are a way to regulate emissions, if we were going back to horse and buggy, there would be no credits, it would be a ban. If you want to emit more, you buy more credits. I honestly am not sure that's the right approach, but its hardly eschewing technology.
You might think they are too expensive to buy, so that "limits" you, but they are an EXPLICIT mechanism to allow for some folks to emit more. You can do this thing that we thnk is dangeorus, but it will cost you more. The concept is to me, like treating it as a consumeable, finite resource.
I used to carry a radiation badge, the NRC (or whatever they are called nowdays) has it on file I am told, so I know what my lifetime dose of radiation is (and if it ever exceeds a certain number, I am not allowed to work with radioactive materials again). I see it as a similar principle, if I wanted to take the risk, and if I could pay to be allowed a higher dose, I might.
But that's not the issue at hand, is it? That's a potential policy direction based on the issue at hand, but that is 100$ seperate from the questions about the science. Does science drive policy? Sometimes yes it does, nuclear waste disposal regulation is strongly driven by the science of radiooactive decay. Does radioactive decay happen regardless of regulations around wasste disposal?